6.5 Creedmoor factory cartridge recommendations

ryan80

AH member
Joined
Jun 4, 2019
Messages
47
Reaction score
76
Media
8
Preface that I don't reload, so I need it to be factory ammo. I currently use the 129 grain Hornady American Whitetail round in both of my 6.5s (Tikka T3x with a Leupold 2.5-8x36 a Mauser M18 with a Vortex Viper 4-16x44) and am happy with the accuracy and performance on Whitetails. I can get for about $17 per box delivered, so under $1 per bullet, which means lots of cheap practice.

I am considering trying some tougher bullets for several purposes. One is hunting large pigs in south Georgia. Another is after a buddy of mine had a run in with a huge black bear while stalking through the woods in Virginia a few months back at a place we hunt together. 3rd is a Western US hunt for mule deer (little bigger than white tails, likely longer range shooting) that I imagine I want a bit more oomph for. I would imagine anything that has been successfully used on small to mid sized plains game would have success in my scenarios.

Some options at decent prices I see are as follows, though the prices range from about $1 per cartridge for the Core Lokt to $2+ for some of the Accubonds.
-140 grain Core Lokt
-140 grain Federal Fusion
-120 grain Remington HTP with Barnes TSX (this is smaller weight, but very solid bullet and 2910 fps)
-120 grain Barnes TTSX (tipped version but otherwise like the Remington)
-143 grain ELD-X (is this a tougher bullet? I see conflicting reviews)
-130 grain Barnes TSX in Fed Premium
-140 grain Nosler Accubond in Fed Premium
-142 grain Nosler Accubond in Winchester LR

I would very much appreciate experiences with these or other factory rounds, both positive and negative. Thanks!
 
Have used 140’s in Corelokt and Fusions on Cow elk out of a 260Rem, they all worked well. Longest shooting was under 250 iirc. I suspect the 129 interlock would have worked well too. That said, the 129 is plenty for MD, to sensible ranges, say under 400.
 
The Fusions I can't quite figure out. Bonded bullet, but supposedly quite soft, right?
 
The 143gr ELD-X is super accurate and does a number on whitetail. Beyond that I can't really say, but it seems like this is one of the better bullets they have made.
 
The fusions are different. The jacket is electroplated to the lead core, so it is bonded, but it’s different than a swift. The Speer gold dot bullets are made the same way. It is way to make an affordable bonded bullet.
 
THe ELD-X is certainly not a tough bullet, softer than the corelokt if anything, based on my .270 experience of them. I'd not use them on euro boar, maybwe your pigs are smaller and softer though?

It is a great deer round, mind.
 
I don't have a 6.5mm Creedmore so I can't advise directly regarding that cartridge.

I experienced stellar performance with the .257 100 grain Nosler Accubond shot from my .25-06 Remington Interarms Mark X on a feral hog hunt last April using Federal Premium factory ammo. Published muzzle velocity for that load is 3100 fps and the hog was approx 100 yards away when I took the shot. I hit the hog in the neck just a bit high of the vertebra, hog was bang-flop. The transferred energy shock was sufficient to put the hog down and not going anywhere, but it was still kicking one hind leg so I gave it a finishing shot striking the vertebrae from the opposite side of the neck due to the side the hog flopped down on. There was a golf ball size exit hole from my first shot, great expansion without striking bone on a relatively thin section of the hog's tissue. No recovered bullets. This gave me confidence risk of a bullet blow-up event at high impact velocities are low with the Nosler Accubond, and good expansion even when striking and traveling through relatively soft tissue that risk of low to no expansion after impact acting like a FMJ projectile was low even at high impact velocities.

I've purchased Underwood factory ammo in .25-06 Remington loaded with the 110 grain Accubond at a published muzzle velocty of 3250 fps, .243 Winchester loaded with the 90 grain Accubond with a published muzzle velocity of 3200 fps, and 7mm-08 Remington loaded with the 140 grain Accubond at a published muzzle velocity of 2950 fps but I haven't used those rounds on game yet.

Underwood offers factory 6.5mm Creedmoor ammo loaded with the 140 grain Accubond with a published muzzle velocity of 2700 fps FWIW.

https://www.underwoodammo.com/colle...osler-accubond-spitzer?variant=18806656794681

Norma has added 6.5 Creedmoor factory hunting ammo loaded with their Bondstrike projectile in 2020 to their 6.5 Creedmoor ammo loaded with the Swift Scirocco II projectile.

https://www.americanhunter.org/arti...0-norma-65-creedmoor-bondstrike-extreme-ammo/
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot (388).png
    Screenshot (388).png
    327.2 KB · Views: 234
  • Screenshot (389).png
    Screenshot (389).png
    293.1 KB · Views: 109
Last edited:
The Fusions I can't quite figure out. Bonded bullet, but supposedly quite soft, right?

Yes, I find them to be soft. My guess is the plating process gives a bonding and still a thin jacket. But at CM velocities, the 140’s do well in most bullets. For me, they perform very similar to a Hornady Interlock, Rem CL, and the like. I use them with confidence on deer, and to moderate range on broad shots on Cow elk. I have had them fragment at higher velocities on close in Cow elk in 130 and 140 grains out of a 270 and 280 respectively, so stopped using them if the launch speed is over 2,700 fps ish by much.

For more penetration, close in black bear/hogs, a 120 mono metal may be the better choice.
 
Took mine out last weekend not do initial sight in. Out of everything I shot Hornady precision hunter 143 eld-x shot best

73C618BD-265C-4660-A7D8-58E6A818689C.jpeg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
The Fusion electroplating process deposits a jacket with uniform thickness, which IMO is less desirable than a bonded bullet with a tapered jacket profile with regard to controlled expansion. Fusion advertises internal skiving to assist expansion, and skiving is also used in some other bonded projectiles to initiate expansion that have tapered jackets such as the Norma Oryx as an example with a similar tip profile. My impression is skiving is particularly useful in initiating expansion, but doesn't really play a role in subsequent expansion.
 
I use them with confidence on deer, and to moderate range on broad shots on Cow elk. I have had them fragment at higher velocities on close in Cow elk in 130 and 140 grains out of a 270 and 280 respectively, so stopped using them if the launch speed is over 2,700 fps ish by much.

Good to know, thanks.
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot (390).png
    Screenshot (390).png
    186.5 KB · Views: 118
  • Screenshot (391).png
    Screenshot (391).png
    65.7 KB · Views: 126
  • Screenshot (392).png
    Screenshot (392).png
    38 KB · Views: 116
  • Screenshot (393).png
    Screenshot (393).png
    44.8 KB · Views: 113
DoubleTap 127gr TSX
 
142 ABLR from Winchester. They work great and hold together. Used on African PG and NA deer and elk. They work great on mule deer.
 
ELD-X has worked very well for me on whitetail, axis and hogs. Haven't used it on anything larger than that.
 
I wouldn’t hesitate to use the 140gr Accubond for all game you have listed. I have had great performance using them out of my 6.5x284, velocity is just under 3000 fps. In fact, I’m sitting in a stand hunting with this load right now.

I’ve taken at least 5 deer and have had a complete pass through on all shots from ~80 yards to ~ 200 yards. At Creed velocities, these bullets should perform well.
 
I wouldn’t hesitate to use the 140gr Accubond for all game you have listed. I have had great performance using them out of my 6.5x284, velocity is just under 3000 fps. In fact, I’m sitting in a stand hunting with this load right now.

I’ve taken at least 5 deer and have had a complete pass through on all shots from ~80 yards to ~ 200 yards. At Creed velocities, these bullets should perform well.

I agree. Plus Federal Premium is far superior quality to Winchester and Remington anything imo. The accubond is a good choice for 200+ yards and for larger/tougher game than a deer
 
https://www.africahunting.com/threa...aris-in-the-northern-eastern-cape-2016.29930/

The above thread is about the best review of the 6.5 CM anyone could wish for. The hunter was clearly an excellent marksman too, btw.
The load was a 129 gr Hornady SST.

I reload, but I've shot a small amount (two or three boxes) of factory Hornady 129 gr SST spread over a couple of 6.5s. My Tikka T3X Lite liked it very well, with good accuracy to 600 Yards. It chronograped suprisingly fast at 2,997 fps using a Magnetospeed.

A long range precision shooter at my gun club used factory 143 gr ELDX on a New Mexico Oryx in a 6.5 CM, and swears by it. One shot kill. The bullet did not exit if that matters.

For tougher game with factory ammo, the 140 gr Accubond gets very good reviews as does the 120 gr TTSX (Barnes).

I reload the 140 Swift A-Frame, but have not tried the factory load.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
53,619
Messages
1,131,301
Members
92,675
Latest member
jhonmark007
 

 

 

Latest posts

Latest profile posts

Impact shots from the last hunt

Early morning Impala hunt, previous link was wrong video

Headshot on jackal this morning

Mature Eland Bull taken in Tanzania, at 100 yards, with 375 H&H, 300gr, Federal Premium Expanding bullet.

20231012_145809~2.jpg
 
Top